Thursday, 27 August 2015

The Insanity of Authoritarianism versus the Rationality of Libertarianism

It never ceases
to amaze me at just how economically illiterate people really are. Of course,
professional ‘economists’ are little better, as they are simply individuals who
are paid to guess wrong about the economy. The answer to the question: ‘what is
the cause of our economic woes?’ is easily answered by anybody who has spent
any amount of time studying history and the relevant aspects of economic
theory. The problem is excessive government meddling in market forces. We often
hear the odious whines of Guardianistas who are only too quick to blame
‘unfettered free-market capitalism’ as they sip their overpriced Starbucks coffee,
spewing forth bile from their MacBooks, iPads, and iPhones. Yet, if we had
generally free-market capitalism, how then do we have a centrally planned complex
regulatory economic system that includes things such as VAT, duty taxes,
government licensing, etc.? A protectionist system is inherently the exact
opposite of a genuinely free-market system. Indeed, not just in the UK, but in
the US, and much of the world, we have an inherently protectionist, centrally
planned economy. Not to the extent of the few remaining socialists states, such
as Venezuela, but such a regulatory apparatus nevertheless exists and is a
continuous economic drain. The most insidious form of government regulation
exists in the form of central banking. The UK, the US, and the EU all have a
central bank. The Bank of England, the Federal Reserve, and the European
Central Bank.

A central bank is
the bank that manages a state’s currency, money supply, and interest rates. The
central bank issues the national currency to commercial banks. This is
inherently problematic, since interest rates are meant to reflect the state of
the market. Yet, this cannot be done if it is being artificially set by a
central bank. Indeed, the government response to economic crisis is to set
interest rates low, but this distorts market forces since the signals that
could be used to tell investors the health of the economy have been altered, subverting
the market process. Having a state-issued currency is also problematic, which
might surprise some. Since only the central bank is allowed to create new
money, people other than the central bank who try to make their own money are
considered ‘counterfeiters.’ One of the functions of the central bank is to
print money, a policy called ‘quantitative easing.’ However, the more bank
notes there are, the less the currency is worth. This is because we have what
is called a fiat currency, which means our currency is just paper not backed by
any kind of physical commodity, such as gold or silver. If our money were
backed by a physical commodity, then new bank notes could only be created
through the acquisition of new physical commodity. Whereas, on a fiat currency,
money can be printed endlessly, which causes the value of each bank note to
decrease. This is called inflation, and one of the effects of this is to
decrease the real value of wages and increase the real value of prices. You
will still be being paid the same wage, but you will notice that, after a few
years, you can’t afford as much as you used to be able to. This is price
inflation, a direct result of monetary inflation.

If other banks
were allowed to print their own money, then the central bank would go out
business if it kept printing its own money ad
infinitum, as its currency would become worthless. Moreover, if we had a
currency or currencies backed by physical commodities, such as gold, silver,
then price inflation would not take place. Prices would only go up and down in
relation to supply and demand. Since we do not have these systems, prices do
not necessarily reflect supply and demand, as they can be inflated via bubbles.
For instance, the US housing market crash. The US government under the
administration of Bill Clinton, told banks that they had to provide mortgages
to low income families who previously would have been unable to afford a
mortgage. The effect of this was to cause house prices to skyrocket (which
government officials and ‘economists’ think is a good thing) and resulted in a
crash as, surprise, surprise, the low income families who could not afford
mortgages could not afford to pay the mortgages the government told the banks
to provide them with. Free banking and sound money would also put an end to the
practice of fractional reserve banking, which is where banks loan out roughly
90% of their reserves, rather than 10%. With free banking and sound money, such
risky practices would either not be engaged in at all, or only engaged in very
rarely.

Now, whilst the
Guardianistas complain about the ‘evil’ and ‘greedy’ corporations, their
proposed solution of more government intervention and regulation to stop
corporations from being evil and greedy is particularly hair-brained and
nonsensical when we consider the fact that the only reason corporations are
allowed to exist and engage in anti-competition behaviour is because they are
propped up and maintained due to government intervention. Wealthy backers of
politicians lobby their pals in government to pass certain legislation that is
beneficial for their company but not their competitors. These politicians then
subsidies these corporations and give them lucrative government contracts,
allowing them to engage in anti-competition practices without suffering the
economic losses that would occur in a free market system. Because, in a
genuinely free market, businesses must live and die on their own merits.
Whereas in our economy, corrupt businesses and corporations can succeed despite
their many palpable and egregious practices. In the US, Democrat senator
Elizabeth Warren claims that ending regulation led to the financial crisis, yet
people ith a memory span of more than five years will be able to point out that
the reason that the commercial banks in the US got bigger is because they were
combined by the regulators.

Regulation is the
best friend of big business and crony corporations. Regulation and licensing
make it more costly to do business, which causes prices to rise. High levels of
taxation also make it more costly and difficult to do business, which, again,
causes prices to rise. With the government in their pocket handing them
contracts and subsidies and effectively handing them a monopoly, these big
businesses and corporations don’t have to play by the rules they would be
subject to in a free-market system. Some people think the solution is to raise
the minimum wage, but anybody with more than half a brain can see that this
would only raise nominal wages, and not real wages. On paper, it will say you
have more, but raising wages artificially will, in turn, make it more costly to
do business, and so prices will rise, unemployment will rise also, and the real
value of wages will DECREASE. You do not fix low wages and unemployment in
order to fix the economy. You fix the economy in order to fix wages and
unemployment. All minimum wage laws accomplish is the outlawing of low paying
jobs, which makes it harder for unskilled workers to get work, and eliminates
entry level jobs. Lots of business nowadays are replacing workers with
automated machines, such as self-service checkouts. As minimum wage laws make
it more costly to do business, business will have no choice but to lay off
workers and replace them with automated machines.

Labour unions are
no better, as they engage in the same nefarious anti-competition behaviour that
hurts workers. For example, the spread of services such as Uber and Lyft,
whilst economically beneficial, are opposed by Taxi labour unions who are
trying to get these services shut down rather than compete fairly. They also
tend to negatively affect non-union members. Despite the common myth that
‘labour unions’ have made conditions better for workers, this is largely
untrue. Technological innovation and competition have made conditions better
for workers. Trade unions, like big business and crony corporatism, do nothing
but hurt workers. They are opposite sides of exactly the same coin. They stifle
competition, which, in turns, stifles innovation. Innovation is the source of
technological advancement, and the betterment of working conditions. The only
people who oppose technological advancement are backwards-thinking Neanderthals
and Luddites. After all, when the motorcar was first invented, it was opposed
by horse and carriage drivers. Yet the invention of the motorcar has vastly
improved conditions for humanity. Some might gripe about pollution from fossils
fuels, but the solution for this is, once again, competition and innovation,
which only comes from free-market capitalism. It is no coincidence that high
oil prices and high energy prices are due, not to the ‘greediness’ of the oil
and energy companies, but because of the excessive amounts of regulations and
taxation that they face.

Whilst the
Guardianistas blame lack of regulation, the Daily Mailers, of course, blame it
all on immigrants and those on benefits. Usually with the typical phrase: ‘they
stole our jobs.’ Yet, immigration has ZERO effect on any of the economically
suicidal policies mentioned. The only reason immigrants might be a drain on the
economy is because the economy is already doing badly. The solution, then, is
not to ban immigration, but to fix the economy. The UK and US in particular are
nations built on immigration. First the Angles, the Saxons, the Jutes, and the
Vikings. More recently, people from India, Jamaica, and various African
nations. Now that it is people from the Middle East and Eastern Europe there is
suddenly a problem? Of course, opposition to immigration is also justified by
claiming terrorists are coming into our country, but, we have to remember, the
whole reason there are a lot of terrorist groups operating in the Middle East
is because they were either funded and set-up by the West, or arisen due to a
power vacuum left in the wake of a foreign incursion by Western nations. The
current Iranian regime was the result of a revolution in the 1970s that was a
response to the US backing a corrupt Shah. The current conflict in Ukraine is a
direct result of Western meddling. Western agents helped instigate and provoke
the protests that ousted the pro-Russian president, and his replacements were
backed by the US and EU. Incidentally, a number of the new Ukrainian leaders
turned out to have neo-Nazi sympathies.

Constant meddling
in the affairs of foreign regions causes instability and power imbalances,
which allows radicals to gain power and influence. Today’s freedom fighters
usually turn out to be tomorrow’s terrorists. The US, after all, funded Bin
Laden, et al. during the 1980s to fight the Soviets. The Syrian rebels funded
by the West became ISIS. Prior to the modern Iraq war, Saddam Hussein was
funded in the 70s by the West, and, using that funding, was able to acquire and
then use chemical and biological weapons not just on the Iranians during the
Iran-Iraq war, but also on the Kurds living in Iraq. Saddam Hussein then went
on to invade Kuwait using the funding and weapons supplied to him by the west.
Former Libyan leader, Muammar Gadaffi, was also funded by the West. Moreover,
constant military intervention overseas combined with constant foreign aid
spending is a huge drain on the economy. Instead of punishing the poor by
cutting benefits spending, we could cut military intervention overseas and
foreign aid spending instead. Whereas today, a lot of immigrants are coming
from nations WE have bombed. So, if we do not want immigrants coming from
war-torn nations, we should probably stop bombing them.

When it comes to
benefits, if we want people to come off of benefits, we need to first fix the
economy. A lot of working people are reliant on benefits such as child tax
credit and housing benefit just to survive. Whereas, benefit fraud is actually
largely negligible, especially in comparison to fraudulent MP expense claims
and tax evasion. As a side note, I don’t mind people dodging taxes, as taxes
are too high. I do mind it, however, when the people doing the tax dodging are
ones who are responsible for the high levels of taxation in the first place
whilst insisting that we are all ‘in this together.’ Taxation is insanely high:
VAT is 20%, our top income tax rate is 50%, corporation tax is 35%. This is
insane and completely unjustifiable to anybody who isn’t an ideological stooge.
Contrary to what those on the left say, the poor do indeed pay taxes, and pay
into a system that robs them of their choices. We have to pay a TV license
regardless of whether we watch the state funded BBC. We have to pay special
duty taxes on cigarettes and alcohol. Yet, government spending continues to
climb. How about, instead of punishing the populace through taxation, we cut
government spending? Again, if we withdrew from foreign conflicts, and ended
all foreign aid we would save a lot of money. Withdrawal from the authoritarian
EU is a must, and we should cut ties with organisations such as the IMF, etc.

Aside from simple
economics, most people are functionally illiterate when it comes to social
issues also, as evidenced by the stance of certain individuals when it comes to
immigration. Healthcare is another issue where common sense is nowhere to be
found in the minds of the populace. We are told that the NHS is the ‘envy of
the world,’ yet the quality of NHS hospitals is generally quite poor and the
waiting lists are atrocious. However, people erroneously claim that the
opposite of this is the American system. Yet, the American healthcare system is
not one of free-markets at all, but is subject to a similar complex regulatory
system. Healthcare is NOT a right, since we are not entitled to the goods,
services, and/or labour of another. Since healthcare requires the goods,
services, and/or labour of others, it cannot be a right by definition. The same
applies to benefits, actually. If we want to help poor people, then we need to
fix the economy. Benefits should only be a short-term solution. It is no
coincidence that those on the left are some of the least charitable people on
the planet. They assume everybody is as uncharitable as themselves, and so
think it is up to the government to force people to give money to the poor.
(Never mind, either, that this is a MASSIVE fundamental human rights violation,
since we are not entitled to the property of others.)

People say we
need the NHS because the price of healthcare is high, and not all can afford
basic healthcare. Except the reason prices are high is because of government
regulation and meddling in the healthcare system. Needless bureaucracy is one
particular problem we face in the UK. If all Hospitals were privately run, and
we ended the complex regulation that governs prices of healthcare, healthcare
would be affordable. One reason healthcare is expensive in the US is not
because Hospitals are privately run, but because of the hoops pharmaceutical
companies have to jump through, the rise of ‘big pharma’ due to government
favouritism. The regulation governing medical schools has made the number of
healthcare providers in the US more scarce. Moreover, the health insurance
system in the US is totally broken. It is not like car insurance where you pay
premiums and, in the event you occur a cost you cannot immediately cover, the
insurance company covers it. Health insurance in the US is not like this. It
also does not help that Barrack Obama passed an act requiring US citizens to
purchase health insurance by law or face fines and penalties. This is exactly
like the sub-prime mortgage crisis/housing bubble under the Clinton
administration.

In a genuine
free-market healthcare system, we would simply not have the problems that the
US system face. Since the US system is not a free-market system, but a hybrid
of private ownership and government regulation. Another way we could save money
is by ending bans on certain classes of voluntary interactions. For instance,
drugs, guns, etc. The only reason such things are banned are due to the
hysterical, irrational shrieking of the uninformed, vapid, supercilious,
condescending, preening twits who think they know what is best for us better
than we do. Human beings have a right to self-defence, self-determination,
freedom of association, liberty, etc. Any mutual exchange and voluntary
exchange should be legal. This would have a drastic effect on prison
populations, as ending victimless crimes would mean a decrease in prisoners.
Gun ownership by law abiding citizens would deter crime, lowering the number of
criminals, and thus prisoners, which would save a lot of money. This is essence
of the non-aggression principle. Acts of initiatory violence and aggression are
always immoral, and the only legitimate use of violence is in self-defence against
an aggressor (as long as it bears a reasonable relation to the level of threat
presented.) Thus, if people want to take certain drugs, they are free to. I can
warn them about the consequences, and, if I really care about them, I can do my
best to dissuade them, but, ultimately, it is their choice. If someone wants to
kill themselves, or wants to die via assisted suicide, then that is their
choice. If someone wants to enter into a relationship with a member of the same
gender as themselves, then that is their choice.

Of course, some
try to smuggle in abortion under this rubric, but it is clear that this is not
the case since abortion is an act that negatively affects the unborn child
without their consent. Human rights apply to all human beings, apply even to
unborn humans. Unless we are to imagine that a human is made only when a clump
of cells infused with mother’s intent makes contact with delivery room air. It
is also apparent that businesses are free to discriminate however they like,
contrary to those baying for the blood of the Christian bakers who dared refuse
bake a cake for a same-sex wedding. The thought police social justice warriors
will claim that, in supporting such a right, we are somehow opposed to
equality. This is once again evidence of a maxim once spoken by the esteemed
intellectual Frederic Bastiat. Socialism, like the ancient ideas from which it
springs, confuses the distinction between government and society. As a result
of this, every time we object to a thing being done by government, we object to
its being done at all. We disapprove of state education. Then the socialists
say that we are opposed to any education. We object to a state religion. Then
the socialists say that we want no religion at all. We object to a
state-enforced equality. Then they say that we are against equality. And so on,
and so on. It is as if the socialists were to accuse us of not wanting persons
to eat because we do not want the state to raise grain.

Simply put, why
can’t we give freedom and liberty a try? We have tried central planning, and
complex government regulation. Whether it is in the form of pure socialism or
the half-private/half-public mixed economy we have now, the result is always
the same. Economic ruin and stagnation. Sure, policy makers can stave off such
disaster temporary, but they can only ever postpone the inevitable. Government
regulation feeds boom-bust cycles, which simply would not occur in a
free-market system. The only people who say otherwise are dyed-in-the-wool
faith heads who place their hope in the almighty government to save the day.
For authoritarianism and statism is a religion, and government is like any idol
or graven image to which men and women ascribe supernatural and divine powers.
What can the government not do if only we have faith in it? Whereas, those with
more than only half a brain; those who base their beliefs on evidence, logic,
and reason; will know that the reverse is true. Opposition to government
meddling is based on the level headed realisation that thousands of years of
government intervention has only ever retarded economic growth and led to
nothing but stagnation, death, and misery. The mayhem of free-market capitalism
is wholly conjectural and without the slightest shred of corroborating evidence.
The mayhem of government is wholly undeniable, wholly factual, and wholly
horrendous.